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Friday, Jan 6, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Have a great weekend!

UPDATE: Comments are now open.

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Kos coming to Illinois

Friday, Jan 6, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Incredibly successful Democratic blogger Markos Moulitsas Zúniga will be attending an event in Naperville this month. Hiram has the scoop.

That’s right the blogfather Markos Moulitsas Zúniga, founder of the Daily Kos, will be the featured guest speaker at the Naperville Democrats fundraiser Sunday late afternoon, January 22nd. $35 gets you in the door with Kos and dinner included. More details in the next day or two - but you can mark your calendars now!

I’ve already asked for a comp ticket.

I may not always agree with him, and we serve two different purposes in life, but he has done a stupendous job building that mighty blog of his (check out Kos’ absolutely amazing site stats).

Let’s use this as a blogging open thread. Post new blog addresses below, discuss your own blog’s latest accomplishments, etc.

  26 Comments      


Question of the day

Friday, Jan 6, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Today’s State Journal-Register editorial endorsed “a short list of obvious reforms” for Congress.

Ban the 200-plus ex-congressmen now working as lobbyists from walking freely onto the House floor during sessions.

Stop allowing lawmakers to use “earmarks” to provide millions to favored companies and organizations without the usual public scrutiny.

Require the deliberations of all conference committees - in which differences between House and Senate bills are reconciled and earmarks are smuggled into legislation - to be public.

Mandate that the language of all bills be posted on the Internet at least 24 hours before they are voted on, except when a supermajority of the House or Senate agrees otherwise.

I know I usually concentrate on Illinois politics, but the never-ending DC scandals could wind up impacting some Illinois races.

What do you think of the SJ-R’s list, and what, if anything, would you add? Also, do you think any reforms will really work?

  8 Comments      


Phone follow-up

Friday, Jan 6, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

The Sun-Times has a follow-up today to yesterday’s piece about the ease of obtaining cell phone calling records.

The Illinois governor and attorney general moved Thursday to end the sale of telephone records without customers’ knowledge, a practice that worries privacy experts and law enforcement agencies.

The Chicago Sun-Times reported Thursday that the Chicago Police Department and FBI are concerned about the potential for criminals to track officers’ cell phone calls through Web services. Attorney General Lisa Madigan responded by issuing subpoenas to one Internet service, locatecell.com, highlighted in the newspaper’s story.

“We will be asking locatecell.com how it obtains the telephone detail information it sells and whether it is through legal means,” said Madigan’s spokeswoman, Melissa Merz.

On another front, Gov. Blagojevich announced he will seek legislation this spring making it illegal for brokers to sell telephone account records and other personal information.

The legislation is supported by Senate President Emil Jones (who is doing very well after his angioplasty, I’m told). I hope that bill moves fast.

  8 Comments      


Mercurical

Friday, Jan 6, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Several stories appeared today about the Governor’s plan to force coal-fired power plants to reduce mercury emissions by 90 percent. This is one example.

Lawmakers and industry officials made it clear Thursday that Gov. Blagojevich’s proposal to drastically reduce mercury emissions from coal-fired power plants is hardly a done deal.

Concerns about the cost and feasibility of Blagojevich’s plan — as well as the need for it — were some issues surfacing in the wake of the governor’s unveiling Thursday of tough new controls on mercury, a neurotoxin released into the air that settles in bodies of water, contaminating fish and the people who eat them.

I haven’t had a chance to follow up on it yet, but a commenter pointed out this potentially significant story yesterday. [emphasis added]

…two Illinois state government scientists claim that most of the mercury found in the environment is natural, not of anthropogenic origin. This finding flies directly in the face of controversial federal regulations designed to reduce environmental mercury by cutting power plant emissions.

The paper by Derek Winstanley and Edward Krug, titled “Comparison of mercury in atmospheric deposition and in Illinois and USA soils,” appears in the journal Hydrology and Earth System Science. Winstanley and Krug are with the Illinois State Water Survey, which Winstanley heads. He is also a former director of the National Acid Precipitation Assessment Program, so is no stranger to controversial coal-fired emissions issues.

The background for the study is a long standing problem with the theory that coal-fired power plant emissions are the leading cause of mercury in fish, namely that there is no correlation between power plant locations and high mercury levels. To overcome this lack of evidence the proponents of the theory, including the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, have claimed that mercury circulates nationally and globally via a process of general atmospheric deposition.

Winstanley and Krug have tested this theory by comparing the estimated anthropogenic emission levels against newly-measured levels of mercury in Illinois, U.S., and world soils. The result, they say, is that human emissions cannot possibly explain the observed amounts of mercury. They conclude that there must exist a natural global mercury flux that is significantly larger than human emissions. Much of it may be water borne, not airborne. If so, then reducing the estimated 50 tons of mercury emitted by U.S. coal fired power plants might have little or no effect on environmental mercury levels.

As Winstanley and Krug put it, “It has been reported that most mercury (Hg) in USA soils is from atmospheric Hg deposition, mostly from anthropogenic sources. This paper compares the rates of atmospheric Hg deposition to amounts of Hg in Illinois and USA soils. The amounts of Hg in these soils are too great to be attributed mainly to anthropogenic Hg deposition.” Their conclusion is succinct — “The hypothesis that most Hg in Illinois and USA soils is of anthropogenic origin is rejected.”

The Illinois State Water Survey, according to its website, is “a division of the Office of Scientific Research and Analysis of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources and an affiliated agency of the University of Illinois at Champaign/Urbana, [and] is the primary agency in Illinois concerned with water and atmospheric resources.”

UPDATE: There’s a good rebuttal to the above article in comments by Truthful James.

  11 Comments      


Broder calls Illinois guv race “crucial”

Friday, Jan 6, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller

Washington Post columnist David Broder wrote a column this week about six governor’s races to watch. Illinois was one of them.

But, at the risk of being contrarian, let me suggest that the most significant results of 2006 will not involve the Senate or House but instead will be found in six Midwest governors’ races.

The campaigns in Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio and Wisconsin will tell us more about the direction of the country and the shape of the 2008 presidential battleground than any of the battles for Capitol Hill — where incumbency advantages in both money and gerrymandering are likely to skew the results.

Governors are closer to their constituents than most senators or representatives, and they exert more influence on presidential politics than their federal counterparts.

Republicans are likely to consolidate their current strength among governors across the South from Florida through Texas. Democrats are poised to solidify their grip on the state capitols in the Northeast, with strong candidates available to challenge in New York and Massachusetts, where Republican incumbents are retiring.

But the Midwest is a real battleground, with one open seat in each party and three Democrats and a Republican facing tough reelection battles.

And this is what he wrote about Illinois.

Democratic Gov. Rod Blagojevich has accumulated a huge campaign war chest but also a slew of investigations as he bids for a second term. The weakened Republican establishment has rallied behind state Treasurer Judy Baar Topinka, but she has opposition from state Sen. Bill Brady, securities executive Jim Oberweis and Ron Gidwitz, a businessman-philanthropist.

Your thoughts?

  21 Comments      


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